Anglim v. City of Brockton

179 N.E. 289, 278 Mass. 90, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 770
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 289 (Anglim v. City of Brockton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anglim v. City of Brockton, 179 N.E. 289, 278 Mass. 90, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 770 (Mass. 1932).

Opinion

Sanderson, J.

This bill in equity was brought to restrain the defendant from discharging into or depositing in a stream flowing through the defendant city above the plaintiff’s property any refuse material, sewage, gravel and other debris, to compel it so to use the water of the stream as not to injure the plaintiff in his occupation and enjoyment of his property, for the assessment of damages and other relief. The case was referred to a master. The plaintiff has appealed from an interlocutory decree denying his motion to recommit the master’s report, overruling some of his exceptions thereto, sustaining others and confirming the report. The plaintiff has also appealed from a final decree dismissing the bill. The evidence is not reported.

When the bill was filed, in 1922, the plaintiff had for about four years held title as trustee to real estate and flowage rights in the city of Brockton and the town of East Bridge-water. A nonnavigable stream which had its source above the city of Brockton flowed through this real estate. Within the limits of the plaintiff’s land were pondage areas, but for many years no dams had been in use to flood these areas and except in times of freshet the water had flowed through the plaintiff’s land only in the channel of the stream. The property which the plaintiff alleges to have been damaged is more than three miles from the city of Brockton. In 1925 the plaintiff disposed of all the real estate to which the suit relates, reserving what the report describes as “the present chose in action.” The bill alleges that since January 1, 1920, the defendant through its servants and agents has deposited gravel, sand and silt in the stream above the plaintiff’s land which have been carried by the current and deposited on the plaintiff’s land, and threatens to con-[93]*93time to do the same. It also alleges that continuously and in violation of the plaintiff’s common law rights and of his rights under the provisions of St. 1888, c. 309, § 9, the defendant has discharged into the stream domestic and manufacturing filth, refuse and other polluting substances by means of a system of sewerage and surface drainage, impairing and destroying the purity of the water, and that the plaintiff’s rights will be irreparably violated and infringed if the defendant is permitted to continue to do the acts of which he complains, his water privileges will be destroyed and rendered of no value, and he will be prevented from utilizing his flowage rights for the lucrative purpose of harvesting and selling ice and for other lucrative uses.

St. 1888, c. 309, is entitled “An Act to authorize the city of Brockton to provide for surface drainage, ¡and to improve the brooks and natural streams within the limits of said city.” Section 1 of the act provides: “The city council of the city of Brockton may adopt a system of drainage for . . . [the] whole or, from time to time, for different parts of its territory, and may provide by ordinance that assessments for making the same shall be made Upon estates within such territory by a fixed uniform rate.” Section 2 provides that the board of mayor and aldermen of the city, “for the purpose of surface drainage, may, within the limits of said city, alter, change, widen, straighten and deepen the channels of any brooks or natural streams . . . and the more effectually to make said improvements may take and hold by purchase or otherwise . . . real estate within the limits of said city, as said board of .mayor and aider-men may adjudge necessary for the purposes of this act.” Section 6 gives any person whose land or rights are taken or who suffers damage or injury in his property or rights from any act of the city or its agents in the execution of the powers conferred by the act the right to have the amount of his damages, making due allowance for the improvement of raising grade, “ascertained and recovered as in.the laying out of highways.” Section 9 of the act defines drainage as used in the act as referring to rainfall, surface and subsoil water only, and provides that nothing in the act shall [94]*94be construed as authorizing the discharge of any domestic or manufacturing filth or refuse or other polluting substances into any of the brooks or natural streams within the city of Brockton either directly or through any drain that may be constructed under the provisions of Pub. Sts. c. 50 or as a part of the system of drainage authorized by this act. It also provides for the approval of the system of drainage by the State board of health before it is constructed and "In case of the violation of any of the provisions of this act, or the creation of a nuisance, appeal may be had to the state board of health, who may order the abatement of any nuisance, if in their judgment there is cause therefor. Any court having jurisdiction in equity may, upon the application of said board, by any process or decree, enforce the decision of said board in the premises.” The master states that the alleged violation of this section is the basis of the plaintiff’s bill in equity.

St. 1914, c. 258, authorizes the city of Brockton to extend its surface drainage system.

The evidence not being reported, we cannot disturb the findings of fact unless inconsistent with each other, and general findings must be held to import a finding of all subsidiary findings essential to the conclusion. It is the duty of the court to decide on the facts found what, if any, relief should be granted. Clark v. Seagraves, 186 Mass. 430. The rule to the master did not require him to make rulings of law, and his rulings to which objection has been made cannot affect the decision of the court. Adams v. Young, 200 Mass. 588. New England Foundation Co. v. Reed, 209 Mass. 556. Bradley v. Borden, 223 Mass. 575, 586.

The plaintiff excepted to the finding that considerable work had been done under the statute for many years before the plaintiff became the owner of the property in question, on the ground that there was no evidence before the master that the proper preliminary steps were taken to bring the work “under the . . . statute.” The statutes in question by their terms took effect upon their passage. It does not appear how the rights of the plaintiff could be affected by this finding, even if wrong or not called for by the pleadings, but [95]*95we see no error in basing such a finding, as the master stated that he did, upon testimony of the superintendent of streets for ten years prior to 1905, and of an engineer employed by the city from 1894 to 1913, introduced without objection. Furthermore it is not to be presumed that public officers in constructing a system of drainage, which was authorized by statute, were acting illegally. The master in a later part of his report found upon evidence not reported that all the work shown by the evidence to have been done in the nature of widening, straightening and deepening the stream, beginning in July, 1919, and ending in September, 1922, was done under authority conferred by the two statutes to which reference has been made and was done by an independent contractor employed by the highway commissioners of Brockton, who are public officers. He also found that all of this work was done in a workmanlike manner.

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.E. 289, 278 Mass. 90, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anglim-v-city-of-brockton-mass-1932.